(Speaking about game Geralt here, book version is a different discussion) Aren't most of these points indicative of him not being a Mary Sue? He certainly is a hypocritical jerk with a very negative outlook on pretty much everyone else, but those are probably the "qualities" heaviest against his Mary Sue status.Marxie said:Actually, no. They are never kidnapping children. As Geralt tells and displays a good dozen times in the books - only an Unexpected Child that was sold off to a witcher according to the Law of Surprise has any chances to survive the mutation process. So no, they are not kidnapping kids - they are buying them bound by the word of honor.ExileNZ said:Dude, this is why you (EDIT: Yahtzee, not any other posters) needed to play more of the first game - Witchers are generally reviled because they literally kidnap children, then train them to death Spartan style.
... except Geralt and his friends, who are all sometimes troubled (to the point of wangst, actually. "YOU'VE SEEN MY SCARS GERALT?! OR MY COLLECTION OF LINKIN PARK CDs?"), but nevertheless Ultimately Good Nice Friendly Educated and Enlightened fellows in a world of Dumb, Superstitious Treacherous Liars.ExileNZ said:I don't know how they come across in The Witcher 3, but certainly in the first game a lot of relatively ordinary people disliked or distrusted Geralt - including a fair share of hypocrites and bigots, because the whole point was that everyone is a hypocrite or a bigot one way or the other.
Yep. Totally not a Mary Sue. That's without mentioning a few dozens of OTHER female characters in both games and books that melt onto his mutant dick just because it's their sole role in the script. Totally not a Sue.ExileNZ said:Geralt is also famous for saving a princess, so he's about as liked as Witchers ever get. He is the rockstar of Witchers - young ladies love a bad boy but their parents all want to keep him at arm's (or pitchfork's) length.
But actually it's not Geralt's unimaginable hypercompetence in fucking everything (and no, he doesn't "just knows some alchemy" - he's an expert on a plenty of different cultures, all things herbal, all things monster, all things magic, all things curses, all things potions, fluent in Elven and a few other languages and has more education than entire Oxenfurt put together), his ability to catch attractive women like dog catches fleas or the Role of One Epic Hero that in the end makes him a Mary Sue.Adam Jensen said:Quoted to catch attention
What does so is his effect on the world around him. Like I said - even when presented with a hard choice, Geralt and his pals are still undeniably The Ultimate Good Guys. All the hardships they face only exist to be beaten and make them even cooler, as opposed to being actual hardships. Every single man or woman or monster who opposes them is just stupid, or evil, or insane, or misguided, or uneducated and is there just to be dealt with and maybe give Geralt a reason for some wangst. No matter what conflict Geralt and Co face and what hard decision they take - they forever have the moral high ground. They are always the more moral, the more humane, the more enlightened and more understanding than everyone around them.
That's what makes Geralt a Mary Sue. And that's what makes a Mary Sue so destructive to a narrative - he shits and pisses on the entire world around him on a meta level to look better in comparison.
Geralt reduces the rabble around him from already not the brightest level of Dung Ages to an entire world of people Far Too Dumb To Live, so that he and his pals may look ever so smart.
Geralt reduces the racial conflicts in his world to "some bunches of dumb people coming at each other because they are dumb and hateful", so that he may place himself above it and look good when he "delivers justice" while "protecting" one innocent human/elf by slaying a fivescore of "dumb and hateful" elves/humans.
Geralt reduces the very complex morality system of old times to "everyone is dumb and evil except us", so that he may look sympathetic to us viewers while bashing on it from the high ground of XXIst century morals that he and his pals adopted SOMEWHERE in their cruel and hateful world.
Geralt reduces every single antagonist in the series to a misguided madman or fool, so that he - an unstoppable super-warrior with a fuckton of political power - never gets into a position where HE might be the one fucking up the world around him with all that power by acting first and thinking second.
Geralt reduces everything he touches, and that makes watching his adventures unbearable at times.
Now, I really loved the first Witcher game (hell, I even enjoyed a plenty of things in the second one) and early Witcher books for their wonderful atmosphere, thought-out plot and immersion. But whenever I hear someone praising their characters or dialogues - I just can't stay my hand from grabbing a bunch of feces and flinging them in that general direction.
Oh, and the entire saga fails forever at any sort of morality play. I can elaborate on that if someone gets angry enough with this wall of text. Or at least bothers to read it.
He certainly has a lot of the hallmarks, but the games are pretty clear on that while he may consider himself dispensing justice / doing the right thing, often it's just a coin toss how exactly it fucked up.
Last note: the games failing at morality is -very- debatable. The majority of choices are unable to be quantified by a morality meter, especially in hindsight. I'm not sure what your definition of "good" is here, but I'm always a fan of crapshoot choices where it's far from clear whether your meddling improved anything.